Title: 12'1Discovery of the Neutron
1CHAPTER 12The Atomic Nucleus
- 12.1 Discovery of the Neutron
- 12.2 Nuclear Properties
- 12.3 The Deuteron
- 12.4 Nuclear Forces
- 12.5 Nuclear Stability
- 12.6 Radioactive Decay
- 12.7 Alpha, Beta, and Gamma Decay
- 12.8 Radioactive Nuclides
It is said that Cockroft and Walton were
interested in raising the voltage of their
equipment, its reliability, and so on, more and
more, as so often happens when you are involved
with technical problems, and that eventually
Rutherford lost patience and said, If you dont
put a scintillation screen in and look for alpha
particles by the end of the week, Ill sack the
lot of you. And they went and found them (the
first nuclear transmutations). - Sir Rudolf
Peierls in Nuclear Physics in Retrospect
212.1 Discovery of the Neutron
- Rutherford proposed the atomic structure with the
massive nucleus in 1911. - Scientists knew which particles compose the
nucleus in 1932. - Reasons why electrons cannot exist within the
nucleus - Nuclear sizeThe uncertainty principle puts a
lower limit on its kinetic energy that is much
larger that any kinetic energy observed for an
electron emitted from nuclei. - Nuclear spinIf a deuteron consists of protons
and electrons, the deuteron must contain 2
protons and 1 electron. A nucleus composed of 3
fermions must result in a half-integral spin. But
it has been measured to be 1.
3Discovery of the Neutron
- Nuclear magnetic moment
- The magnetic moment of an electron is over 1000
times larger than that of a proton. - The measured nuclear magnetic moments are on the
same order of magnitude as the protons, so an
electron is not a part of the nucleus. - In 1930 the German physicists Bothe and Becker
used a radioactive polonium source that emitted
a particles. When these a particles bombarded
beryllium, the radiation penetrated several
centimeters of lead.
412.2 Nuclear Properties
- The nuclear charge is e times the number (Z) of
protons. - Hydrogens isotopes
- Deuterium Heavy hydrogen. Has a neutron as well
as a proton in its nucleus. - Tritium Has two neutrons and one proton.
- The nuclei of the deuterium and tritium atoms are
called deuterons and tritons. - Atoms with the same Z, but different mass number
A, are called isotopes.
5Nuclear Properties
- The symbol of an atomic nucleus is .
- where Z atomic number (number of protons)
- N neutron number (number of neutrons)
- A mass number (Z N)
- X chemical element symbol
- Each nuclear species with a given Z and A is
called a nuclide. - Z characterizes a chemical element.
- The dependence of the chemical properties on N is
negligible. - Nuclides with the same neutron number are called
isotones and the same value of A are called
isobars.
6Nuclear Properties
- Atomic masses are denoted by the symbol u.
- 1 u 1.66054 10-27 kg 931.49 MeV/c2
7Sizes and Shapes of Nuclei
- Rutherford concluded that the range of the
nuclear force must be less than about 10-14 m. - Assume that nuclei are spheres of radius R.
- Particles (electrons, protons, neutrons, and
alphas) scatter when projected close to the
nucleus. - It is not obvious whether the maximum interaction
distance refers to the nuclear size (matter
radius), or whether the nuclear force extends
beyond the nuclear matter (force radius). - The nuclear force is often called the strong
force. - Nuclear force radius mass radius charge
radius
8Sizes and Shapes of Nuclei
- The nuclear radius may be approximated to be R
r0A1/3 - where r0 1.2 10-15 m.
- We use the femtometer with 1 fm 10-15 m, or the
fermi. - The lightest nuclei by the Fermi distribution for
the nuclear charge density ?(r) is
9Sizes and Shapes of Nuclei
The shape of the Fermi distribution
- If we approximate the nuclear shape as a sphere,
- The nuclear mass density is 2.3 1017 kg / m3.
1012.4 Nuclear Forces
- The angular distribution of neutron classically
scattered by protons. - Neutron proton (np) and proton proton (pp)
elastic.
The nuclear potential
11Nuclear Forces
- The internucleon potential has a hard core that
prevents the nucleons from approaching each other
closer than about 0.4 fm. - The proton has charge radius up to 1 fm.
- Two nucleons within about 2 fm of each other feel
an attractive force. - The nuclear force (short range)
- It falls to zero so abruptly with interparticle
separation. stable. - The interior nucleons are completely surrounded
by other nucleons with which they interact. - The only difference between the np and pp
potentials is the Coulomb potential shown for r
3 fm for the pp force.
12Nuclear Forces
- The nuclear force is known to be spin dependent.
- The neutron and proton spins are aligned for the
bound state of the deuteron, but there is no
bound state with the spins antialigned. - The nn system is more difficult to study because
free neutrons are not stable from analyses of
experiments. - The nuclear potential between two nucleons seems
independent of their charge (charge independence
of nuclear forces). - The term nucleon refers to either neutrons or
protons because the neutron and proton can be
considered different charge states of the same
particle.
1312.5 Nuclear Stability
- The binding energy of a nucleus against
dissociation into any other possible combination
of nucleons. Ex. nuclei R and S. - Proton (or neutron) separation energy
- The energy required to remove one proton (or
neutron) from a nuclide. - All stable and unstable nuclei that are
long-lived enough to be observed.
14Nuclear Stability
- The line representing the stable nuclides is the
line of stability. - It appears that for A 40, nature prefers the
number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus to
be about the same Z N. - However, for A 40, there is a decided
preference for N gt Z because the nuclear force is
independent of whether the particles are nn, np,
or pp. - As the number of protons increases, the Coulomb
force between all the protons becomes stronger
until it eventually affects the binding
significantly. - The work required to bring the charge inside the
sphere from infinity is
15Nuclear Stability
- For a single proton,
- The total Coulomb repulsion energy in a nucleus
is - For heavy nuclei, the nucleus will have a
preference for fewer protons than neutrons
because of the large Coulomb repulsion energy. - Most stable nuclides have both even Z and even N
(even-even nuclides). - Only four stable nuclides have odd Z and odd N
(odd-odd nuclides).
16The Liquid Drop Model
- Treats the nucleus as a collection of interacting
particles in a liquid drop. - The total binding energy, the semi-empirical mass
formula is - The volume term (av) indicates that the binding
energy is approximately the sum of all the
interactions between the nucleons. - The second term is called the surface effect
because the nucleons on the nuclear surface are
not completely surrounded by other nucleons. - The third term is the Coulomb energy in Eq.
(12.17) and Eq. (12.18).
17The Liquid Drop Model
- The fourth term is due to the symmetry energy. In
the absence of Coulomb forces, the nucleus
prefers to have N Z and has a
quantum-mechanical origin, depending on the
exclusion principle. - The last term is due to the pairing energy and
reflects the fact that the nucleus is more stable
for even-even nuclides. Use values given by Fermi
to determine this term. - where ? 33 MeVA-3/4.
- No nuclide heavier than has been found in
nature. If they ever existed, they must have
decayed so quickly that quantities sufficient to
measure no longer exist.
18Binding Energy Per Nucleon
- Use this to compare the relative stability of
different nuclides. - It peaks near A 56.
- The curve increases rapidly,
- demonstrating the saturation
- effect of nuclear force.
- Sharp peaks for the even-even
- nuclides 4He, 12C, and 16O
- tight bound.
19Nuclear Models
- Energy-level diagrams for 12C and 16O.
- Both are stable because they are even-even.
Case 1 If we add one proton to 12C to make
unstable
Case 2 If we add one neutron to 12C to make 13C
stable
20Nuclear Models
- Even when we add another neutron to produce 14C,
we find it is barely unstable. - Indicating neutron energy levels to be lower in
energy than the corresponding proton ones.
- In this mass region, nature prefers the number of
neutrons and protons to be N Z, but it doesnt
want N Z.
This helps explain why 13C is stable, but not 13N.
2112.6 Radioactive Decay
- Marie Curie and her husband Pierre discovered
polonium and radium in 1898. - The simplest decay form is that of a gamma ray,
which represents the nucleus changing from an
excited state to lower energy state. - Other modes of decay include emission of a
particles, ß particles, protons, neutrons, and
fission. - The disintegrations or decays per unit time
(activity). - where dN / dt is negative because total number N
decreases with time.
22Radioactive Decay
- The number of radioactive nuclei as a function of
time
23Radioactive Carbon Dating
- Radioactive 14C is produced in our atmosphere by
the bombardment of 14N by neutrons produced by
cosmic rays. - When living organisms die, their intake of 14C
ceases, and the ratio of 14C / 12C ( R)
decreases as 14C decays. The period just
before 9000 years ago had a higher 14C / 12C
ratio by factor of about 1.5 than it does today. - Because the half-life of 14C is 5730 years, it is
convenient to use the 14C / 12C ratio to
determine the age of objects over a range up to
45,000 years ago.